
With love, from an invader: Rhododendrons, Empire, China, and Me - Yan Wang Preston
With Love. From an Invader. â Rhododendrons, Empire, China and Me is an intensive field study. Every other day for a year, Yan Wang Preston (CN/GB) went to a particular love-heart-shaped Rhododendron ponticum bush and photographed it. The ritual walks offered her time and space to experience, observe, and explore the land from different perspectives. She not only looked, listened, touched, and played, but also used a variety of methods to highlight the âinvisibleâ aspects of the otherwise bare landscape. Her infrared motion-sensitive cameras saw more than 20 different animal species, while her sound recorder heard over 45 different bird species in the area.
These Rhododendron ponticum plants are located at the outskirt of Burnley in Lancashire, UK. The plants thrive in this area as a legacy of the local hunting estate during the 19th century, when the plants were grown to provide cover for the game. British rhododendrons are all introduced plants, brought from southern Europe and East Asia for science and horticulture. Once the subject of the ârhodo-crazeâ in the Victorian era, the plantâs reputation has changed dramatically since the mid-20th century. Although still common and a much-loved sight in most British gardens, one hybrid species, the ponticum variety, is frequently labelled as non-native invasive in conservation management, targeted to be removed with often violent means. For example, Forestry and Land Scotland has âused chainsaws, pesticides, and considerable human power to remove this unwelcome alien.â
Certainly not the only species treated this way, the Rhododendron ponticum is a case study for such naturalised hierarchy between the native and the non-native. This unquestioned hatred of the non-native rang alarm for Wang Preston. Like millions of others, she is a migrant in the United Kingdom. The contested perceptions of rhododendrons suggest that politics is at play within the apparent objectivity of science and the definition and ownership of the British landscape. What is a ânationalâ British landscape and its associated ânational ecologyâ? Who defines it? And in whose favour? Wang Preston sought to understand both rhododendrons and her own position in this land. What she finds, through the making of With Love. From an Invader. and Autumn Winter Spring Summer, is that the rhododendrons in this area are certainly not invasive. Rather, they are a keystone species that plays a central role in the local ecology.
With Love. From an Invader. celebrates the life and resilience of the rhododendron. The book creates space to contemplate the intimacy, beauty, and strength of nature, and the eternity of time within an ecological and political framework. It is a love letter from a non-native species to the cosmopolitan ecology of contemporary Britain. It is also a love letter to the British land from its non-native inhabitants who make it a home for its multicultural residents, both human and non-human.
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Description
With Love. From an Invader. â Rhododendrons, Empire, China and Me is an intensive field study. Every other day for a year, Yan Wang Preston (CN/GB) went to a particular love-heart-shaped Rhododendron ponticum bush and photographed it. The ritual walks offered her time and space to experience, observe, and explore the land from different perspectives. She not only looked, listened, touched, and played, but also used a variety of methods to highlight the âinvisibleâ aspects of the otherwise bare landscape. Her infrared motion-sensitive cameras saw more than 20 different animal species, while her sound recorder heard over 45 different bird species in the area.
These Rhododendron ponticum plants are located at the outskirt of Burnley in Lancashire, UK. The plants thrive in this area as a legacy of the local hunting estate during the 19th century, when the plants were grown to provide cover for the game. British rhododendrons are all introduced plants, brought from southern Europe and East Asia for science and horticulture. Once the subject of the ârhodo-crazeâ in the Victorian era, the plantâs reputation has changed dramatically since the mid-20th century. Although still common and a much-loved sight in most British gardens, one hybrid species, the ponticum variety, is frequently labelled as non-native invasive in conservation management, targeted to be removed with often violent means. For example, Forestry and Land Scotland has âused chainsaws, pesticides, and considerable human power to remove this unwelcome alien.â
Certainly not the only species treated this way, the Rhododendron ponticum is a case study for such naturalised hierarchy between the native and the non-native. This unquestioned hatred of the non-native rang alarm for Wang Preston. Like millions of others, she is a migrant in the United Kingdom. The contested perceptions of rhododendrons suggest that politics is at play within the apparent objectivity of science and the definition and ownership of the British landscape. What is a ânationalâ British landscape and its associated ânational ecologyâ? Who defines it? And in whose favour? Wang Preston sought to understand both rhododendrons and her own position in this land. What she finds, through the making of With Love. From an Invader. and Autumn Winter Spring Summer, is that the rhododendrons in this area are certainly not invasive. Rather, they are a keystone species that plays a central role in the local ecology.
With Love. From an Invader. celebrates the life and resilience of the rhododendron. The book creates space to contemplate the intimacy, beauty, and strength of nature, and the eternity of time within an ecological and political framework. It is a love letter from a non-native species to the cosmopolitan ecology of contemporary Britain. It is also a love letter to the British land from its non-native inhabitants who make it a home for its multicultural residents, both human and non-human.
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